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I was thinking a donation card to the World Wildlife Organization (he’s crazy for animals and very interested in them)in his name for $100? Is that good? I was told that toys or monetary gifts to the child were frowned upon for such a religious event.
Or something else? Not being Catholic I don’t feel comfortable getting him a medal or anything religious. |
| Perfect gift! And very generous. |
I love it - is there something a little more local that a 7 YO can connect with for the donation? Are they in DC and is there a specific area in the DC Zoo ? Or the local Animal Rescue League? I would not overthink it / spend too much time as it is a very thoughtful (and generous) gift. |
| That sounds like a nice gift. Though I will say money for a first communion gift is pretty typical, at least it is in my Irish catholic family. Maybe it’s frowned upon in some other traditions, but not ours. |
Ha! This Irish Catholic agrees that monetary gifts are quite prevalent in our family. My parents give each grandchild a $100 bill, plus another gift! Not that you need to do that as a guest. My kids got between $20 and $50 from family friends who came to their celebrations. My cousin got a baseball bat from his mom and my DS got a long pole from us. Anything goes, OP. Anything goes. |
My off-the-boat dad used to reference first communion gifts to describe someone tight with money. “Sure, he still has his first communion money” would mean your man never spent spent a thing a hoarded his cash. |
Disagree. While it is indeed a (possibly overly) generous amount to spend I don’t think many 7-8 year olds are realistically going to appreciate a charitable donation in their name- even if it is to a cause they are interested in, unless there’s some kind of experiential element that they can connect to directly. I would say save those types of gifts for adults/teens who can better appreciate them and let kids be kids. We are a fairly religious Catholic family and I definitely don’t think there’s any stigma against giving a toy or a small monetary gift for a first communion. In contrast I’d find it somewhat strange for a non family member/godparent to give a religious medallion/cross etc, especially if they themselves were not religious. Also definitely no need to spend $100 (unless you run in particularly wealthy circles) $20-25 is perfectly fine. Barring a close family connection I would spend along the lines of what you would for a birthday gift. |
Perfect! It reinforces a Catholic value you share, so it's related without going against your own beliefs. |
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We usually give pearl earrings
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How is this a gift?
BTW are you invited to the party. I had all of mine in restaurants at lunch with beer and wine. I have a speech thanking guests, folks wore jackets. I put cash gifts in kids bank accounts. And they wrote thank you notes. |
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Donation gifts are great ideas when "no gifts" is requested with the invitation, of the guest of honor requests "in lieu of".
Otherwise they are inappropriate. Give the damned 7 year old kid a fricking present. |
OP says “he”. |
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An IUD would make a great gift. I kid, I kid. Not really, actually.
Money is fine. $50-$100. |
You wouldn't put "no gifts" on an invitation for an occasion that doesn't have a gift giving expectation. No gifts for a wedding, or b'nai mitzvah, or birthday? OK but to put it on a communion invitation would be very odd. My kids at 7 absolutely got the idea of being honored with a charitable donation. Would they have preferred a toy? Probably, but they also would have preferred a toy to the donations to their college fund that a lot of family gave them. |
It's odd to put "no gifts" for a party for someone if you don't want gifts? That's odd that you think that. Where I live people bring gifts to a party for someone, and first communion party definitely has a "gift giving expectation".
This isn't about you, though, is it? OP didn't ask what you wanted or what your kids were taught, |